The
von-Kármán plasma experiment is a novel versatile experimental device designed
to explore the dynamics of basic magnetic induction processes and the dynamics
of flows driven in weakly magnetized plasmas. A high-density plasma column
(1016–1019 particles. m−3) is created by two radio-frequency plasma sources
located at each end of a 1 m long linear device. Flows are driven through J × B
azimuthal torques created from independently controlled emissive cathodes. The
device has been designed such that magnetic induction processes and turbulent
plasma dynamics can be studied from a variety of time-averaged axisymmetric
flows in a cylinder. MHD simulations implementing volume-penalization support
the experimental development to design the most efficient flow-driving schemes
and understand the flow dynamics. Preliminary experimental results show that a
rotating motion of up to nearly 1 km/s is controlled by the J × B azimuthal
torque.
Website: http://www.arjonline.org/physical-sciences/american-research-journal-of-physics/
Website: http://www.arjonline.org/physical-sciences/american-research-journal-of-physics/
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